10 Mo. 648 | Mo. | 1847
delivered the opinion of the Court,.
This was an action for a libel, alleged to have been written by Nelson,, in a letter addressed to some one in the State of Tennessee. The libellous words charged, were as follows: “He (the plaintiff,) is thought no-more of than a counterfeiter, a horse thief, a liar and a false swearer; he keeps had company; he has no neighbors here. I have his character from Illinois in black and white, assigned by thirty-one good citizens that knew him in that country, and could of had a hundred, and is worse there than here if possible.”
The defendant pleaded not guilty, and a special plea of justification. — . The special plea affirms the truth of the alleged libellous matter in the language of the declaration, averring, that at the time of writing of said letter, &c., the plaintiff was not thought any more of than a counterfeiter, &c,; that he, the said plaintiff, did keep had company; that he had no neighbors, See., See.
The only question which can arise on the record is the sufficiency of the declaration. If the declaration be good, it is clear that the plea is insufficient. To say of a person that he is no more thought of than a counterfeiter, a horse thief, &c., would seem to be but a circumlocutory insinuation that he is a horse thief and a counterfeiter, and the onlyjustification of such a libel, must be the commission of those offences by the individual charged. The plea merely amounts to the assertion, that others besides the writer of the libel, entertain the same unfavorable opinion of the defendant, and this fact, though it might mitigate the damages, could not amount to a justification.
It is however contended, that the words charged are not libellous, and the argument is based upon the idea, that words of a similar import^ when spoken, could not be actional. But the rule which prevails in relation to oral slander, is not applicable to actions for libel. Words, to be actionable, when spoken of a person not in any office, trade or profession» must imply the imputation of an offence, which would subject the offender to some infamous punishment. On the other hand, a libel is defined by Judge Parsons, (Commonwealth vs. Clapp, 4 Mass. Rep., 168,) to be “a malicious publication, expressed either in printing or writing, or by signs or pictures, tending either to blacken the memory of the dead, or the reputation of one who is alive, and expose him to public hatred, contempt or ridicule.” In McCorkle vs. Burris, (5 Binn. Rep., 849,) C. J. Tilghman said that “any malicious printed slander, which tends to expose, amanto ridicule, contempt, hatred or degradation, is a libel.” This definition is not the less applicable, when the suit is brought by the party injured, than when a public prosecution is instituted. Stow vs. Converse, 3 Con. Rep., 341; Clark vs. Binney, 2 Pick. Rep., 115; Southwick vs. Stevens, 10 Johns. Rep., 443; Steele vs. Southwick, 9 Johns. Rep., 214; Thomas vs. Crosswell, 7 Johns. Rep., 264; Walker vs. Winn, 8 Mass. Rep., 248.
Judgment affirmed.